Dutchie (doughnut)

Dutchie

A dutchie from Tim Hortons
Type Doughnut
Place of origin Canada
Creator Tim Hortons
Main ingredients Dough, raisins, sugar glaze
Cookbook: Dutchie  Media: Dutchie
For the generic doughnut named Dutchie, see Oliebol.

The dutchie is a Canadian doughnut popularized by the Tim Hortons chain.[1] It is a square, yeast lifted doughnut containing raisins that is coated with a sugary glaze. It is one of two doughnuts (along with the apple fritter) that has been available on Tim Hortons' doughnut menu since the chain's inception in 1964,[2] a position that has helped it become popular in Canada. In 1991 the Toronto Star reported that the dutchie and apple fritter were the chain's most popular type of fried dough, and that readers rejected the paper's contrarian taste test results.[3]

In Canada

In an informal 1988 poll of Toronto Star readers, Tim Hortons was awarded three gold medals, two for its Dutchies and one to the banana cream doughnut. The company's double chocolate and honey glazed fared less well with the judges.[4]

In 1995 the Toronto Star had a story reflecting on Tim Hortons "selling out" to Wendy's with "the spectacle of another great Canadian icon, one more priceless chocolate coconut cream-filled dutchie glazed cruller Timbit of our precious heritage, gone to Yankee burgerfat, (rounding) out the menus of the two chains by blending Tim Hortons morning meals and snacks with the strength enjoyed by Wendy's in lunches and dinners; burp; and nobody around to pass the Maalox?"[5]

A 2009 New York Times story reported an apparent scarcity of doughnut specialties such as the dutchie at newly opened New York City Tim Hortons stores and contrasted the baked from scratch at stores approach of Krispy Kreme and some Dunkin' Donuts locations compared to the "flash frozen" and shipped Tim Hortons method. Noting that "American visitors tend to flock to the sweets", including the "raisin-studded Dutchie", the Times found redemption among Canadians that the brand is once again a Canada-based company while contrasting the way politicians in the U.S. "woo" soccer moms while in Canada they "go after Tim Hortons voters".[6]

In February 2014, Tim Hortons announced that the dutchie timbit was discontinued due to low popularity.[7]

See also

References

  1. Tim Hortons. "Tim Hortons: On Our Menu". Retrieved 2009-11-20.
  2. Tim Hortons. "The history of Tim Hortons". Retrieved 2009-11-20.
  3. Marion Kane Tim Hortons fans dunk our results [FIN Edition] May 1, 1991, page B.3 Section: FOOD Toronto Star
  4. David Kingsmill DOUGHNUTS Star drivers steer toward Tim Hortons in informal poll of six brands [FIN Edition] November 23, 1988, page F.1 Section: FOOD Toronto Star
  5. Susan Kastner Simple fairytale takes on whole new meaning [Final Edition] August 13, 1995, page E.2 Section: PEOPLE Toronto Star
  6. Ron Lieber Tim Hortons Arrives in Bits and Pieces July 14, 2009, New York Times
  7. City News Toronto Dutchie Timbit among 24 items cut from Tim Hortons menu February 21, 2014
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